A fantastic laid back lifestyle
Gods
Beautiful climate
Beautiful women
Metaxa 3 Stars
Interesting archeology
Culture
Olives
Shipping
History
Sea
Retsina
Wind
Not much of which pays the bills though.
A fantastic laid back lifestyle
Gods
Beautiful climate
Beautiful women
Metaxa 3 Stars
Interesting archeology
Culture
Olives
Shipping
History
Sea
Retsina
Wind
A fantastic laid back lifestyle
Gods
Beautiful climate
Beautiful women
Metaxa 3 Stars
Interesting archeology
Culture
Olives
Shipping
History
Sea
Retsina
Wind
Not much of which pays the bills though.
Not much of which pays the bills though.
Tourism does, olives should, wind should, and shipping did and could.
All the European countries are dealing with debt and deficits, and because of the way international finance operates, all economies are linked to some extent. But if you really believe the Greek economy is no different to the UK, you're misleading yourself. London is arguably the world's largest commercial centre. Manufacturing is on the up, from a low base admittedly. Unemployment is reducing and it's not zero hour contracts. Slowly, very slowly, prosperity is returning to the UK and European countries in the Northern Hemisphere.
What has Greece to offer beyond cheap tourism? And you may say the same for some of the surrounding countries.

Yes I'd like economic growth- it should benefit everyone. Who's to say if the world's resources will run out and when? The biggest problem we face is over-population and that will only possibly be solved by educating the poorest people in the world and raising their status which typically goes hand in hand with smaller families.
The WWF 2002 report, based on scientific data from across the world, reveals that more than a third of the natural world has been destroyed by humans over the past three decades and that the planets resources are expected to expire by 2050.
Also - PhysOrg.com) -- Eminent Australian scientist Professor Frank Fenner, who helped to wipe out smallpox, predicts humans will probably be extinct within 100 years, because of overpopulation, environmental destruction and climate change.
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2010-06-humans-extinct-years-eminent-scientist.html#jCp
Quite a lot has happened in the last 13 years. Do you have a more recent prediction, like one which incorporates more modern methods for finding and extracting natural resources and the huge discoveries around the world since then?
Yay - more stuff to burn - that'll help stave off the bleak predictions of the future.Quite a lot has happened in the last 13 years. Do you have a more recent prediction, like one which incorporates more modern methods for finding and extracting natural resources and the huge discoveries around the world since then?
I didn't really explain my thoughts very well there did i Goldie
I understand that our economy is driven by completely different methods of income generation to the Greeks. The point i was trying to make ( albeit in my usual cackhanded way) was that with an increase or two in interest rates many people in the UK could well find themselves plunged into poverty by the financial institutes over here as is currently likely to happen to the unfortunate people of Greece when the ECB / IMF pull the plug.
YeahA fantastic laid back lifestyle
Gods
Beautiful climate
Beautiful women
Metaxa 3 Stars
Interesting archeology
Culture
Olives
Shipping
History
Sea
Retsina
Wind
Yeah
But apart from that
What have the Greeks ever given us
nahSadly, this says everything about modern Greece. It's all in the past. They need to reinvent themselves, especially commercially
May be we should start their ball rolling by returning the Elgin Marbles...
Why? So they can be more like us?Sadly, this says everything about modern Greece. It's all in the past. They need to reinvent themselves, especially commercially
May be we should start their ball rolling by returning the Elgin Marbles...
Why? So they can be more like us?
They should do exactly what their climate tells them to do - as little as possible, very slowly.
Whatever scenario this will be very hard on ordinary people in Greece. But ecomonic stability, rather than prosperity, is more strongly aligned with happiness. Hence 7 of the top ten 'happy' countries being relatively poor latin American ones.I dare say climate does come into it, and I'm not holding the UK out as a model necessarily, but the serious question is - is what is happening over there leading to a happy, contented people and the answer at the moment, when no one can get money from the bank and the future looks bleak, is no.
We Brits go over there, laze on the beaches, and think what genial, relaxed people the Greeks are (and they are), and then come back and forget about their problems. If Greece gets kicked out of the euro and the drachma is devalued many times...well, you only have to look at Germany in 1929 to see the pressures this can create on a society.